selden wrote:About 20% of all "stars" are actually multiple star systems, so it's not all that unlikely that you'd manage to pick doubles by accident.
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There are only about 200 binaries in the STC catalogs included with Celestia, however. So that makes it a little less likely
Since it was me who added the 200 binary star orbits, I took that
tiny binary fraction 200/112519 = 1.78
per mille (!) as an indicator that phoenix's statement
phoenix wrote:I'm getting the same margin of error between 0.02 and 0.05 ly for any random star-combination.
must have been based on a
vanishingly small statistical sample which does leave us with a fair amount of questions...
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Statement weakened after PM by Selden, instructing me about the possible occurrence of improbable events...
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phoenix wrote: ...the problem was i picked 5 random stars which now all checked out as multiple star systems (seriously picked by accident)
Put differently: given the probability of only
1.8 per mille to randomly pick one binary (with known orbit) in Celestia, phoenix' claim to have picked
accidentally 5 such guys at the first go clearly points towards a breakdown of the laws of statistics
Never mind ...
Bye Fridger
PS: I did know about the true fraction of binaries that is indeed quite high.